Life Still Happens
Recovery doesn't protect us from life.
I've been sitting with a hard truth lately. I've worked this program diligently for years. I attend meetings, have a sponsor, and practice the Steps. I pray and meditate. My life is immeasurably better than when I first walked through Al-Anon's doors. Yet, difficult things still happen.
Recovery doesn't protect us from life's challenges. My car still breaks down. My body still gets sick. People I love still die. Relationships still end. Money is sometimes tight. The alcoholic still drinks. Recovery didn't make me immune to pain or shield me from loss or guarantee smooth sailing. Life's difficulties persist.
What recovery did change is how I navigate hardship. I don't face hard things alone anymore. I have tools when crisis comes. I know how to ask for help. I can feel my feelings without being consumed by them. I have perspective; this too shall pass. I trust a Higher Power that stays with me through every valley.
The promise wasn't that life would be easy. The promise was that I wouldn't have to handle it the way I used to – alone, afraid, controlling. Recovery doesn't eliminate difficulty. It transforms my relationship with difficulty. That's enough. That's everything.
When hard things happen, I don't have to pretend they're not hard. I can call my sponsor, go to a meeting, pray for help. Recovery didn't promise to eliminate problems—it gave me tools to face them differently.